...whereas, as far as i'm concerned, that's already happened. I hate it when people tell me marriage is a 'religious thing' because it isn't, and it wasn't religious originally. It's a social institution. I know a tonne of married atheists, after all. Marriage is about declaring a partnership's status for legal purposes - an easy way of re-assigning next-of-kin status and formalising domestic relationships - and the fact that organised religions have decided to co-opt the institution when it suits their needs to do so is beside the point. I think we need to take the religious connotations back out of the word 'marriage', rather than trying to adopt some kind of cumbersome term like 'civil partnership' - it just doesn't work as a verb, for one thing. I've never heard people talk about someone being 'civilly partnered', people just say 'married', regardless of the technicalities and regardless of whether or not religion was involved; similarly people usually just say 'husband' or 'wife' instead of 'civil partner' because it's just plain easier. Why should the Church get first pick of the easy words? They didn't invent marriage!